Truro News

NSCC Truro holds open house

Students can learn everything from health sciences to video game programmin­g

- BY FRAM DINSHAW

Denison Percey looks every inch the young student: a grey hoodie and a nely-swept curtain of black hair down the side of his bespectacl­ed face.

The Elmsdale resident was in Truro recently to check out IT courses at the Nova Scotia Community College campus on Arthur Street, joining hundreds of other prospectiv­e students considerin­g quali cations in IT, business and health sciences, to name a few.

“I’d like a job, preferably creating something or coding,” said Percey of the NSCC. “It’s close to home, it seems there’s a lot of success that comes out of it and it’s also pretty cheap.”

According to the college’s Truro principal Lech Krzywonos, 83 per cent of students graduating from NSCC campuses around the province will land a job in their eld.

In addition, 93 per cent of NSCC students are from Nova Scotia and 92 per cent of graduates will remain in the province, bucking the trend of youth outmigrati­on to other parts of Canada.

“ at gives you a little bit of a rationale of what the value propositio­n is. If you come to NSCC and you choose to work in the province, you will get a good job and career upon graduating,” said Krzywonos.

Students signing up for courses at NSCC can choose from health and human services, criminal justice, law and security, business and medical o ce administra­tion, community recreation and practical nursing.

In the IT sector, which Percey is keen on, students can master programmin­g, game developmen­t and digital animation. Other students can upgrade their education, for example, by obtaining their Grade 12 quali - cation.

Meantime, current students were keen to tout the NSCC to potential newcomers.

“It’s a great experience, I love it here,” said Azlyn Edens, who is in her second year of a video game developmen­t course. “I’m a second year, I’ve learned a lot from my course and the people you meet here are amazing, they’ll be friends for life.”

Due to graduate next May, Edens’s background is more internatio­nal than many of her peers. She grew up in Scotland with her Canadian parents, living in the capital Edinburgh, and has both Canadian and British nationalit­y.

Her Canadian citizenshi­p allowed her to enroll as a local student and pay the same fees as any Nova Scotian, which Krzywonos said were lower than university tuition rates in any case.

As an added bonus, students who signed up for courses on Oct. 18 could do so without paying the usual $ 25 applicatio­n fee.

 ?? FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS PHOTOS ?? LEFT: Grade 12 student Denison Percey is hoping to pursue a career in IT. He came to the NSCC open house from his home in Elmsdale to see what was o ered at the Truro campus.BELOW: NSCC College principal Lech Krzywonos chats with Mollie Macburnie from Debert. Hundreds of school students and adults seeking to further their education came to the NSCC’S Truro campus to learn more about the courses o ered and college life.
FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS PHOTOS LEFT: Grade 12 student Denison Percey is hoping to pursue a career in IT. He came to the NSCC open house from his home in Elmsdale to see what was o ered at the Truro campus.BELOW: NSCC College principal Lech Krzywonos chats with Mollie Macburnie from Debert. Hundreds of school students and adults seeking to further their education came to the NSCC’S Truro campus to learn more about the courses o ered and college life.
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